Honor Among Thieves: Road to Neverwinter Review

I'm frequently disappointed by media tie-in novels. Many are lackluster or feel like they're going through the motions. That makes Jaleigh Johnson's Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves: The Road to Neverwinter, one of two prequel novels for the movie releasing on March 31, such a pleasant surprise.

DnD Honor Among Thieves Road Neverwinter.jpg


The Framing Story​

While DnD:HAT:TRtN (that title is a mouthful even abbreviated) is a prequel and therefore has no spoilers for the movie, be warned if you want to walk into the movie knowing absolutely nothing. This review will discuss characters from the movie. Similarly, while I won't give away major plot points from the book, I do reference things mentioned in promotions for the book.

Technically, DnD:HAT:TRtN is a story Edgin (played by Chris Pine in the movie) is telling his daughter. That story begins with Edgin the bard as a widowed father, having recently quit the Harpers (think good guy spies in Faerun) after his wife was killed in retribution by enemies of the Harpers (this is referenced in one of the movie trailers). Edgin is floundering amidst his grief and decides to go to the local tavern with his infant daughter for a hot meal.

It Starts in a Tavern​

Like all good D&D adventures, important things happen in a tavern.

An exhausted Edgin meets Holga (played by Michelle Rodriguez in the movie), who has been expelled by her tribe, and they end up helping each other. Flash forward nine years, and Edgin and Holga visit that same tavern again, this time meeting Forge (Hugh Grant), a con man. When the town is attacked, Edgin, Holga, and Forge team up to get their stuff back, and end up hailed as heroes. Forge then parlays that into an opportunity for them to make “easy money” a few months later, looking for someone who disappeared.

But it's never that easy in a D&D adventure.

During that expedition, the group meets Simon (Justice Smith), a half-elf sorcerer striving to live up to his family's legacy. Afterward, Simon brings them an opportunity to rob a wealthy, eccentric dragonborn mage.

Unlike some D&D groups, Edgin and his crew put together a good heist plan. Like most D&D campaigns, things get complicated and don't go as planned.

Is it Good?​

DnD:HAT:TRtN needed to accomplish three things: 1) encourage people to see the movie; 2) please existing D&D fans; and 3) attract fantasy fans who have never played D&D. The prequel does an excellent job on all three counts.

The story feels like D&D adventures, and the book also has a lot of heart. One of my complaints about Dragonlance: Dragons of Deceit was that I never felt an emotional connection to Destina or the other characters. In DnD:HAT:TRtN, I feel for Edgin's survivor's guilt and need to protect his family of misfits in a world with gnolls, beholders, dire wolves, etc.

Author Jaleigh Johnson also doesn't reach for the stereotypical reasons when a better one is believable. Holga is a perfect example. She's a strong, blunt, axe-wielding barbarian, but her reasons for being reluctant about certain things go deeper than barbarian cliches, and made me feel for Holga.

Movie novelizations and prequels are typically written while the movie is filming, so they have the shooting script to work from but no actual footage. Johnson does a great job of matching the characters' dialogue to the tone and delivery the actors use in the trailer. In the audiobook version, narrator Fred Berman enhances this by evoking the actors without doing actual impressions of them. It's easy to imagine the actors in their roles.

I read this book very fast because it engaged me quickly, and I didn't want to put it down – and that's the mark of a good book. Some D&D books feel more like they're checking off a list of D&D terms and tropes with shallow characters that evoke little interest or empathy.

Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves: The Road to Neverwinter had enough twists to keep me guessing, and characters I came to care about. I was also far more entertained by it than other similar books I've read. If the actual movie is anything like this prequel, it's going to be good. A+
 
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Beth Rimmels

Beth Rimmels


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This physically looks very different than WotC novels have in the past. I suspect this is being handled by a movie tie-in novel outfit.
WotC hasn’t produced a novel since 2016. Like the new Dragonlance trilogy, this and The Druid’s Call are being published by Random House Worlds, which is also providing editorial services. I’m sure WotC (as well as Paramount) has a lot of input and can veto things, but it’s not producing the book in any meaningful sense.

Edit to add: I haven’t yet read my copy of the novel that was positively reviewed here, but I did just finish reading the druid one aloud to my 11-year-old. It’s radically different in tone from any other FR novel ever published, in that it’s a bona fide YA novel (all about a young protagonist finding her place in the world and working through her emotions and insecurities—with very few action scenes) yet it fits in the setting in a way that (for example) the Dungeon Academy novels don’t (they’re intended for an upper-elementary/lower-middle-school readership, whereas Druid’s Call is pitched at an upper-middle/lower-high-school audience). My kid absolutely loved it.
 
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Dire Bare

Legend
WotC hasn’t produced a novel since 2016. Like the new Dragonlance trilogy, this and The Druid’s Call are being published by Random House Worlds, which is also providing editorial services. I’m sure WotC (as well as Paramount) has a lot of input and can veto things, but it’s not producing the book in any meaningful sense.

Edit to add: I haven’t yet read my copy of the novel that was positively reviewed here, but I did just finish reading the druid one aloud to my 11-year-old. It’s radically different in tone from any other FR novel ever published, in that it’s a bona fide YA novel (all about a young protagonist finding her place in the world and working through her emotions and insecurities—with very few action scenes) yet it fits in the setting in a way that (for example) the Dungeon Academy novels don’t (they’re intended for an upper-elementary/lower-middle-school readership, whereas Druid’s Call is pitched at an upper-middle/lower-high-school audience). My kid absolutely loved it.
While true that WotC isn't directly publishing novels anymore . . . they still have editorial control over the books published by Random House (I'm 98% sure). Right now, that's just the new Dragonlance trilogy, the continuing Dark Elf series, and the movie tie-ins.

I will say that "Road to Neverwinter" is Jaleigh Johnson's sixth Realms novel (I believe), so she's an established Realms scribe, for whatever that's worth.
 

Is it DEST-ina or Des-TINA? I first thought it was the former, like "Luke, it is your Destina."
I read far enough into the book to find out that she was named by her mother, who was a seer/prophet/Chislev cleric who foresaw that her daughter would have a great destiny and named her accordingly. So I assume the former.
 





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